A map that I made map I saw in a dream I had tonight. It was about that during the drang nach osten the HRE also went north into scandinavia.
And yes France was like that.
And yes France was like that.
The Roman Republic at its greatest extent, prior to the Gothic and Hunnic Invasions and the First Fall of Rome, 927 Ab Urbe Condita.
I present to you a map that I am still working on. Go nuts I know you will
I reserve the second page to put a map on...
The Roman Republic at its greatest extent, prior to the Gothic and Hunnic Invasions and the First Fall of Rome, 927 Ab Urbe Condita.
You picked the worst possible time to make the new one, I wasn't home to post on the first page.
Here's my map, a fix of the one I posted
So 174 AD?
All hail Map Thread IV, daughter of Map Thread III of the Threadirid Dinasty
From my old map of Norman Lusitania, here it goes the expansion of the Kingdom up to 1350. I'm finishing the next one for the total norman dinasties in Europe and will post sooner than you think
*MAP*
BTW, yes, the cities are in some kind of Portuguese/Castillian hybrid monster, Aragonese in Catalonian, and Navarrese in... wait, in what language did I make those Navarese towns?
I'm still working on my presentation skills, so this is a bit messy: from my pre-scripted (i.e. not written yet ) timeline.
Basically, the Britons (Pridaen) weathered the Anglian invasions, and fought with them back-and-forth for centuries, until around 1300 when England fell dynastically under the aegis of France (later becoming a formal part of the United Kingdom of France). With Pridaen unwilling to incur the wrath of France, and France not interested in invading a cold, dirty island, the border was secure, and Pridaen therefore had the luxury of collapsing into decentralised chaös.
Thus by 1600 we have hregnification (except even less holy, even less Roman, and even less imperial). The main noble families (Tyluithai) are marked, together with the monastic states (Aabatae).
All hail Map Thread IV, daughter of Map Thread III of the Threadirid Dinasty
From my old map of Norman Lusitania, here it goes the expansion of the Kingdom up to 1350. I'm finishing the next one for the total norman dinasties in Europe and will post sooner than you think
BTW, yes, the cities are in some kind of Portuguese/Castillian hybrid monster, Aragonese in Catalonian, and Navarrese in... wait, in what language did I make those Navarese towns?
Sibilya is the Mozarabic/Moroccan Emirate of Sevilla. It was actually Ishbillya IIRC, but this would be a Mozarabic evolution from the name. BTW, thanks!What is Sibilya?
Awesome map, a Norman kingdom in Spain is very interesting.
Here stands the corrected and extended version, in good Basque for everybody
I'm still working on my presentation skills, so this is a bit messy: from my pre-scripted (i.e. not written yet ) timeline.
Basically, the Britons (Pridaen) weathered the Anglian invasions, and fought with them back-and-forth for centuries, until around 1300 when England fell dynastically under the aegis of France (later becoming a formal part of the United Kingdom of France). With Pridaen unwilling to incur the wrath of France, and France not interested in invading a cold, dirty island, the border was secure, and Pridaen therefore had the luxury of collapsing into decentralised chaös.
Thus by 1600 we have hregnification (except even less holy, even less Roman, and even less imperial). The main noble families (Tyluithai) are marked, together with the monastic states (Aabatae).